…Okay.…Let's take a look at the page transition events, and here in…the Snippet, I will scroll down to that section under chapter seven.…So let's open up pagetrans_start, and you can…see in here I've got two different internal pages.…There's first page and second page, and these are the…pages that we're going to use to exercise the transition events.…So, let's go to the snippets, and let's…copy this script block, the whole thing,…and paste it into the head above the meta tag.…

So, there are four different events that I'm going to be listening for in here.…There's page container show, page container hide, and then…there's page container before show and page container before hide.…So, the page container is an object that…governs how pages are loaded and animated into place.…And if you want to learn more about the page container…element, there's a section on the jQuery Mobile docs about this.…And let me just quickly show that.…

This is the jQuery Mobile API docs for the page…container widget, and you can see the URL right there.…

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Released

6/3/2014

Build great-looking mobile web applications without having to learn native code! Think iOS without Objective-C, Android without Java, Windows Phone without C#. Joe Marini introduces the jQuery Mobile framework, and provides a look at some companies (like OpenTable and Dodge) that are using it right now to build rich, interactive mobile webpages that approach the behavior of native apps. He reviews jQuery Mobile's page structure, controls, navigation, responsive layout, and theming. The course also covers the built-in library of widgets for building web content, list views, and web forms that are optimized for mobile screen sizes and that respond to gestures and changes in device orientation.